Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Lord Mervyn King offers his outlook on the future of the British economy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think there are two different aspects to the question of no-deal. One is the likely longer run impact on the UK economy, which I think has been overplayed, considerably overplayed. No one really knows, but there's an awful lot of bogus pontification [or quantification?] going into the estimates of how bad it would be. The second issue, however, is the shorter term one: whether the immediate consequences can be managed. And that depends entirely on how much preparation has gone into it."
Faculty News

Dean Raghu Sundaram joins other deans in sharing recommended summer reads for future business majors; Professor Dolly Chugh's book, "The Person You Mean to Be," is highlighted

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants for Undergrads -- "Author Tara Westover tells the story of her life growing up with no formal education in a survivalist household, and how she eventually completed her doctorate at Cambridge. It’s been chosen as the summer reading for all incoming NYU undergraduate students because the transition to college can be a step into a larger, more public, and more diverse world of ideas, people, and cultures. ... Chugh provides us with an eye-opening guide to becoming the person we’d truly like to be, and not just be a good person, but a good-ish person, who is always moving forward."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides explains how some of Amazon's business practices could be considered antitrust behavior

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "'Once you start bundling irrelevant stuff like video service, which retailers cannot match, that creates the possibility of an antitrust issue, and this is something that may be investigated,' he said."
Faculty News

The Dunning-Kruger effect, Professor Justin Kruger's joint research on self-perception, is referenced

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Excerpt from the The New York Times -- "David Dunning and Justin Kruger discussed the many reasons people who are the most incompetent (their word) seem to believe they know much more than they do. A lack of knowledge leaves some without the contextual information necessary to recognize mistakes, they wrote, and their 'incompetence robs them of the ability to realize it.'"
School News

Isser Gallogly, associate dean, MBA Admissions and Program Innovation, highlights Stern's MS in Accounting program in a feature story on specialized master's programs at New York City-based b-schools

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Excerpt from MiM Guide -- "'New York City offers unique advantages. After graduating from our program, many students begin their careers working in one of "The Big Four" large public accounting firms — Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Ernst & Young, and KPMG,' says Isser Gallogly, associate dean at NYU Stern, referring to the school’s one-year MS in Accounting course."
Press Releases

To Address Public Pension and Infrastructure Funding Gaps, Connect the Two: NYU Stern Infrastructure Finance Initiative

Ingo Walter
A new book by NYU Stern Professor Ingo Walter and co-author Clive Lipshitz illustrates the challenges facing America’s public pension system and its public infrastructure and suggests solutions to both, particularly by connecting the two.
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt shares his outlook on democracy in the United States

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Excerpt from The Australian -- "'I am now very pessimistic,' Haidt said. 'I think there is a very good chance American democracy will fail, that in the next 30 years we will have a catastrophic failure of our democracy.'"
Business and Policy Leader Events

Stern EMBA Speaker Series: Jo Ann Jenkins

Jo Ann Jenkins
On July 19, 2019, NYU Stern's Executive MBA Program and NYU Washington DC hosted a Stern EMBA Speaker Series event at NYU’s downtown DC location featuring Jo Ann Jenkins, CEO of AARP.
Faculty News

In a podcast interview, Professor Baruch Lev offers suggestions on how firms can share relevant, useful information with their investors

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Excerpt from IR Magazine -- "Price comes, of course, from the stock market, from this floor, but book value comes from accounting. And it's completely mistaken, particularly because of this expensing of all intangibles. When we correct book values of companies—for the expensing of R&D, for the expensing of other intangibles—meaning we capitalize and amortize, rather than expense them immediately, we get substantially higher income from value investing. I mean, it's almost double."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter's book, "Irresistible," is cited in an article on Instagram's design updates

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Excerpt from Marie Claire UK -- "New York University professor Adam Alter, author of Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked explains that when we get ‘likes’ on social media our brain releases dopamine, known as the pleasure chemical."
Faculty News

Professor Deepak Hegde is interviewed for a story on the prevalence of female-founded unicorn startups in 2019

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Excerpt from CGTN -- "'There are stereotypes that women don’t tend to take risks as much and a large part of entrepreneurship is kind of risk taking. Now just because you’re a risk taker doesn’t mean you’re a better founder, but that can unfortunately end up propagating these biases as well,' said Hegde."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Hardart comments on Netflix's second-quarter results

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Excerpt from The Wrap -- "Paul Hardart, a former Warner Bros. executive and current head of the Entertainment, Media and Technology Program at NYU, called Netflix’s results 'concerning,' but pointed out 'Q2 has historically been their worst quarter from a reporting standpoint.'"
Faculty News

In an interview, Professor Amy Webb discusses the US and China's geopolitical rivalry over AI

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Excerpt from Politico -- "'We are being outspent. We are being out-researched. We are being outpaced. We are being out-staffed,' said Amy Webb, a professor at the NYU Stern School of Business who specializes in future forecasting. 'We have failed and are continuing to fail to see China as a militaristic, economic, and diplomatic pacing threat when it comes to AI.''
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari shares her perspective on how the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale is causing confusion among customers

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Excerpt from Retail Dive -- "'There is something off-balance on how the various tiers of loyalty membership have been structured,' Serdari​ told Retail Dive in an email. A Member is 'probably an occasional shopper who enjoys the brand association,' and then 'there is a considerable "spend" difference between Insiders and Influencers (from $500/year to $2000/year) that truly differentiates regular beauty shoppers from apparel devotees,' she noted."
School News

Paul Barrett, deputy director of the Center for Business and Human Rights, provides his recommendations for how YouTube can combat disinformation from spreading on the platform

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Excerpt from BEME News -- "Paul Barrett, deputy director of NYU Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights, told me that YouTube's preference for increasingly extreme content is a feature of the system, not a bug. He told me YouTube is in the advertising business, so they have a financial incentive to keep users engaged."
Faculty News

Professor Jason Greenberg's joint research on entrepreneurial ventures is cited

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Excerpt from Livemint -- "In a paper titled Sole Survivors: Solo Ventures Versus Founding Teams Jason Greenberg of the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University and Ethan R. Mollick of University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School posit that companies started by solo founders survive longer than those started by teams."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides shares his outlook on the European Union's case against Amazon

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'It’s an innovative case,' said Nicholas Economides, an economics professor who looks at competition issues at New York University Stern School of Business. He thinks the EU has a real challenge if it attempts to show that Amazon’s use of the data is anticompetitive. 'Information alone is not going to make the case,” Mr. Economides said."
Faculty News

Professor Ingo Walter's joint research on bridging public pension funds and infrastructure investing is featured

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Excerpt from Reason Foundation -- "The authors analyzed asset allocation and return data for the nation’s 25 largest pension funds over a 10-year period. They found no correlation between allocations to infrastructure (and other alternative investments) and net investment returns. They hypothesize that higher expenses for these exotic investments offset their higher gross returns, but cannot verify this contention due to inadequate and inconsistent expense data reported by the funds."
Faculty News

In a radio interview, Professor Thomaï Serdari discusses how the fashion industry has become more size-inclusive

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Excerpt from Knowledge@Wharton on SiriusXM -- "'There are many things that have been going wrong in the fashion industry, starting with the fact that this is a male-dominated industry in terms of leadership and in terms of designers,' Serdari said. 'So what has been produced over the years for women has been dictated by men and follows some sort of ideal of an ideal woman that is not reflecting the reality and the actual size of women today.'"
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson discusses the impact of Professional Bull Riders' alignment with U.S. Border Patrol on its brand

Excerpt from Front Office Sports -- "'Given (PBR’s) core audience, being the one league that embraces the ‘Right’ side of the political spectrum makes a bunch of sense,' Adamson says. 'If you stand for everything, you stand for nothing. Sports is about more than just watching an event. It’s about connecting with people who share the same passion and have the same view on life.'"
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir's joint research on payment options and spending behavior is cited

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "A 2008 study from New York University professor Priya Raghubir and University of Maryland, College Park professor Joydeep Srivastava tested whether people approached other forms of payment similar to how they used credit cards. Their study found that consumers spent more when they were given scrip, a form of a stored-value certificate, rather than cash."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla is interviewed for an article on historically low interest rates

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "'If a significant fraction of [the world’s bond market] has negative interest rates, that’s pretty unusual,' said Sylla. Even in recent history, he added, such occurrences are rare. In 1940-1941, he said, rates on short-term U.S. bonds went negative as the economy still grappled with the fallout from the Great Depression."
Faculty News

Professor Sabrina Howell is quoted in a feature article on her joint research with Professor David Yermack on initial coin offerings

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Excerpt from the Econ Focus -- "'There is definitely some regulatory arbitrage and quite a bit of fraud that has happened,' says Howell. 'But I think ICOs also open the possibility for some exciting new business models.'"
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson is quoted on the impact of Amazon Prime Day on the retail landscape

Excerpt from Adweek -- "'All retailers have the same problem in July…people are at the beach and in vacation mode, not shopping mode,' said Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing services firm Metaforce and adjunct associate professor at the NYU Stern School of Business. 'What has changed is Amazon is a big enough gorilla to create something that can change people’s perception of what they should be doing on a hot July day.'"
Press Releases

Endless Frontier Labs at New York University’s Stern School of Business Paves the Way for Science-based Startups

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New York University Stern School of Business is accepting applications for the 2019-2020 cohort of Endless Frontier Labs (EFL), a program for early-stage science- and technology-based startups. The program is structured to optimize each startup’s chance of scaling into a successful company through a goals-based mentoring process.

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